NOVEMBER 23, 2009
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The Center
1111 14th St., NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20005
202-682-2245
www.thedccenter.org

Whitman-Walker Clinic
1407 S St., NW
Washington, DC 20009
202-797-3500
www.wwc.org

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Financial crisis prompts Pride takeover offe
Whitman-Walker rejected Capital Pride overture from gay community cente

HOME > NEWS > LOCAL

Jul 01, 2005  |  By: LOU CHIBBARO JR.  | COMMENTS      Printer Friendly Version

Leaders of D.C.’s gay and lesbian community center approached Whitman-Walker Clinic officials in April and asked them to consider turning over operation of the city’s annual Capital Pride festival and parade to the Center, creating a rift among the Center’s board and raising questions about the Clinic’s ability to operate Pride festivities, according to sources.

Whitman-Walker officials said they turned down the Center’s overture, insisting the financially troubled Clinic would continue to run Pride events despite a dramatic cutback in Clinic health services as part of an overall downsizing effort.

The Capital Pride parade took place June 11 and the 30th annual Capital Pride festival was held June 12 on Pennsylvania Avenue near the U.S. Capitol.


Offer to co-sponsor
President Michael Sessa and Vice President Larry Stansbury proposed that the Center co-sponsor D.C. Capital Pride with Whitman-Walker this year, according to sources familiar with the D.C. Center for Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual & Transgender People, and take steps to become the sole operator of the Capital Pride festivities in 2006.

Two sources with inside knowledge of the Center, who spoke on condition that they not be identified, said Sessa and Stansbury acted after learning through back-channel sources in March that Whitman-Walker was in the midst of a financial crisis and might not be able to pay vendors and contractors for services crucial to putting on the Capital Pride festival and parade.

“[They] were told how the Clinic was in deep trouble and that contractors involved in Capital Pride weren’t getting paid,” said one of the sources.

Whitman-Walker officials disclosed in May — nearly two months after the Center began discussions about taking over Capital Pride — that a severe cash flow shortage caused the health agency to miss payroll and withhold payment to creditors. Clinic officials said longstanding funding problems would force it to lay off nearly a third of its staff, cut its budget by $2.5 million, and give away or close its satellite clinics in suburban Virginia and Maryland.

The information provided by the sources appears to contradict a statement two weeks ago by Roberta Geidner-Antoniotti, the Clinic’s interim executive director, that Whitman-Walker’s financial problems did not affect its ability to sponsor Capital Pride.


$70,000 bailout
One of the Center sources said the Human Rights Campaign, a national gay rights group, helped avert a cash crisis for Capital Pride by providing Whitman-Walker with an emergency donation of more than $30,000. D.C. Mayor Anthony Williams also stepped in to waive more than $40,000 in city fees for street closings and police overtime pay associated with the festival and parade.

Without these two actions, Whitman-Walker may have been forced to greatly curtail the size and scope of the Pride festivities, clinic and Center sources said.

In an interview, Geidner-Antoniotti disputed that assessment. She said she would have rearranged the Clinic’s priorities and juggled its precarious finances to pay any expenses needed to put on Capital Pride if the HRC donation and the mayor’s fee waivers did not materialize.

“We knew how important Capital Pride was,” Geidner-Antoniotti said. “So we prioritized our efforts.”

She confirmed that HRC gave the Clinic a direct donation and arranged for some of its D.C. area members and large donors to raise an additional $22,000 for the Capital Pride effort.

HRC spokesperson Steven Fisher said HRC gave the clinic a direct $10,000 donation for Capital Pride and put out an e-mail alert to its D.C. area members informing them of the clinic’s need for financial support for Capital Pride. He said the HRC members responded by contributing about $22,000, providing the clinic with a total of about $32,000 in HRC-generated funds for Capital Pride.

Fisher said HRC was pleased to provide assistance to what it considers an important gay community event in the nation’s capital.


Clinic won’t release Capital Pride financials
Geidner-Antoniotti declined to release a financial statement showing the expenses and income associated with Capital Pride for this year and for 2004.

She said the clinic never releases “internal” financial information other than its annual report and its audited finance statements, which are released two years after the year they represent. Those statements, however, do not itemize expenses and income associated with Capital Pride, Geidner-Antoniotti said.

Sessa said members of the Center’s 13-member board of directors have ...

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